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Transparent Process

How PharmaGuide Works

A transparent, research-driven approach to supplement and medication awareness

PharmaGuide helps people understand how supplements and medications may interact by organizing existing scientific and regulatory information into a clear, accessible experience. We focus on education, transparency, and privacy — so users can make more informed decisions with their healthcare providers.

Privacy-First Research-Backed Clinician-Reviewed
The Process

Four steps to understanding your supplements

Each step is designed to provide clarity without making clinical judgments.

Step 1

Product Identification

Scan and identify supplements

Users begin by scanning a supplement barcode or searching by product name. PharmaGuide matches the product against its curated reference database using:

  • Label recognition and ingredient matching
  • Public manufacturer disclosures
  • Standardized supplement naming conventions

This step establishes what the product is, not what it claims to do.

Step 2

Quality & Composition Analysis

Understand what's inside the product

Each supplement is analyzed using research-based reference criteria — with a clear breakdown showing what drives each assessment:

  • Ingredient transparency and labeling clarity
  • Known bioavailability considerations
  • Manufacturing disclosures and third-party testing claims
  • Presence of ingredients flagged by regulatory or clinical sources
Step 3

Interaction & Safety Review

Identify documented interactions

PharmaGuide cross-references ingredients against:

  • Other supplements in the user's stack
  • Common prescription medication classes, with expanding coverage
  • Documented contraindications and interaction mechanisms

Only interactions supported by published research or authoritative sources are shown.

Step 4

Educational Guidance & Reporting

Prepare for informed conversations

Users can:

  • Review summaries of interaction mechanisms
  • Explore cited research sources
  • Generate shareable summaries to bring to healthcare appointments
See It In Action

What an Analysis Looks Like

Here's a real scenario PharmaGuide can evaluate

What You're Taking

  • Rx Warfarin (blood thinner)
  • Supp Fish Oil 3,000mg
  • Supp Vitamin E 400 IU
  • Supp Ginkgo Biloba

What PharmaGuide Flags

Major Interaction

Combined effect on clotting. All three supplements may enhance anticoagulant activity. Recommend review with prescriber.

Sources: NIH ODS — Omega-3 · NIH ODS — Vitamin E

Want to check your own stack? Join the beta waitlist →

See more example analyses →

Our Methodology

Research & Review Process

Built by engineers. Verified by healthcare professionals.

Review focuses on information accuracy and clarity, not clinical decision-making.

Source Identification

FDA, NIH, peer-reviewed clinical literature

Ingredient Analysis

Systematic ingredient-level evaluation

Pharmacist Verification

Licensed pharmacist review

Clinical Advisory Review

Physician and clinical oversight

Ongoing Updates

Continuous monitoring as new research emerges

This process is designed to prioritize accuracy, traceability, and accountability.

Clinical Review Team

Dr. Pham L.PharmD · 15+ years clinical experience
Miriam D.NP · 12+ years clinical experience
Data Protection

Privacy by Design

Your data stays yours

PharmaGuide is built with privacy as a foundational principle:

No sale of personal health data
Minimal data collection
Local-first processing where possible
HIPAA-inspired security practices

Users remain in control of their information at all times.

What PharmaGuide Doesn't Do

We don't diagnose conditions
We don't provide medical advice
We don't replace your clinician
We don't sell your health data
Why This Matters

Supplement safety shouldn't be a mystery

Many supplement-related risks arise not from individual products, but from combinations. PharmaGuide exists to make interaction information easier to find, easier to understand, and easier to discuss — so users and clinicians can work from the same information.

Beta is rolling out in waves. Waitlist members get priority access.

Our data sources include:

FDA Dietary Supplement Label Database NIH Office of Dietary Supplements Peer-reviewed clinical literature Clinician-informed review

Medical Disclaimer: PharmaGuide provides educational information about supplement and medication interactions. This content is not medical advice and should not replace consultation with a qualified healthcare provider. Always consult your doctor or pharmacist before making changes to your medication or supplement regimen.

Last updated: | Reviewed by: Pham L., PharmD (Clinical Pharmacist)

PharmaGuide · Operated by B&Br Technology · Boston, MA 02101

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